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June 29th, 2011 by sarahapps

CyberMummy11

For the past few months my inbox has been getting filled with reminders about CyberMummy 2011, which took place on Saturday 25th June.

For those of you who don’t know about CyberMummy it is the UK’s conference for Mummy (and Daddy) bloggers – the opportunity for them to come together for workshops designed to help them with their blog writing as well as giving them a chance to meet one another outside of their virtual worlds.

I arrived at 8am whilst the other Sponsors were setting up and stood watching as the queue began to unfold. Once the doors opened you could feel the excitement in the air as each attendee let out a sigh of relief that the day they had been waiting for had finally arrived.

A lot of the mums I spoke with were having a much needed break from their normal day to day home life. Some spoke of their apprehension from being away from their children, whilst others bashfully exclaimed of their shyness at having been out of the social pool for so long.

Product after product of baby friendly brands were grasped by eager hands in the form of goody bags and standalone items.

After the first initial hour of meeting and greeting and parents making their way across the company in brand sponsored cars and luxurious hotels the first speeches of the day kicked off at 9.30am. After a rapturous applause for the events founders Lord Richard Allan, Facebook’s Director of Policy, kicked off the conference with the topic ‘Working with Facebook: the power of social web’.

He handled questions from the floor well, especially when asked about privacy and content ownership where he not only reassured all there present that Facebook would never reveal their contact details or sell off their images.

The second key note speaker, and the one most people were there to see, was Sarah Brown, the wife to former Prime minister – Gordon Brown. Active in charity work and the founder of PiggyBankKids she took the floor to a wave of applause and flashes of photography where she discussed her work and spoke of the launch of her new book ‘Behind the Black door’.

There were four workshops throughout the day covering everything from working with brands and making money using your blog to SEO and the basics of a well designed blog with writing tips thrown in for good measure. I’m not surprised that those attendees present were like giddy school girls. I have never met a nicer, more welcoming group of individuals who not only understand their need within their community but the power they hold when it comes to brands.

There were some really inspiring individuals from the speakers to the friends I made throughout my time there. And whilst the insight into mummy bloggers grow and grow so does their power within consumer brands and the expansion of their following.

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August 27th, 2010 by michael.frier

Top Tips for Live TV – or “don’t be a moron!”

Over the past few months there has been a series of high profile bugger ups on live news broadcasts. It is the role of a PR to ensure this happens as little as possible. PRs have the marvellous job of being able to push people in front of these cameras knowing that if they say the wrong thing the spokesperson not the PR will look a berk. PRs then get the joy of critiquing that person on exactly where they went wrong and why they now look like a complete buffoon. However, I thought I would help these Public Relation Advisors everywhere by including below my three favourite top tips (with glorious examples) of how to not look like a moron on TV.

Top Tip #1 – Live TV is not the time for swearing

After weatherman Tomasz Schafernaker stuck his middle finger up at BBC New’s 24 Simon McCoy it was then reported that he had previously called Glastonbury “Muddy Sh*te” rather than “Muddy site”. Though I am sure he was not wrong with this particular Freudian slip, it does lead me to ask: who ever put this man on live TV? He is clearly far too stupid! However, if he just followed the golden rule of not swearing on live TV then he may have avoided such criticism.

Top Tip #2 – Don’t try to ‘sex up’ serious news events

The weatherman with the silly name follows other brilliant live TV mess ups which have led me to ask the question: who put this moron on TV? This often comes when people try to make a news story that much more exciting. Kay Burley, in true Sky News style, is often caught out trying to make stories that much more headline grabbing. For instance, during Sky News coverage of the 9/11 attacks she somehow felt the need to hyperbolise the biggest news event of a generation by greeting viewers with this fantastic gem, “and if you’ve just joined us, the entire eastern seaboard of the United States has been decimated by a terrorist attack”. Kay managed to top this by asking the wife of Suffolk serial killer Steve Wright “Do you think if you’d had a better sex life he wouldn’t have done this?” Clearly the wife’s fault! I don’t know about you, but when I don’t get any for a while – I just have to strangle someone. Perhaps Kay Burley should have taken this tip to heart. Both these events were already huge stories; she did not need an attempt to make them bigger.

Top Tip #3 – If national news cameras are near you, behave!

This rule is a big one. If there are cameras around you, make sure you are not doing wrong otherwise you will be caught out and will look a moron. Remember ‘that banker’ who was watching porn on his company computer whilst a live TV interview happened behind him. He was nothing to do with the broadcast, just having a normal day at the office – and let’s face it, whose normal day at the office doesn’t involve the watching of pornographic movies. Sadly, he seemed to forget that this national news interview would be happening right behind his desk – he quickly became far more interesting than the actual story. What a banker!

And it’s not just everyday office workers who need this tip re-iterating to them 24/7. Who can forget the marvellous ‘bigotgate’. Although probably having little effect on the outcome of the election, it couldn’t have helped. Our own Prime Minister (at the time) Gordon Brown, surrounded by advisors, still forgot that national news cameras were listening in when he referred to Gillian Duffy as a “bigoted woman”.

Both Gordon Brown and our lonely banker really should have remembered that when you are near news cameras and journalists, you really should be on your best behaviour!

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May 6th, 2010 by Abbie Waller

Free coffee and a little bit of vote rigging

I love Tossed – lots of delicious salads, soups, wraps and stews that have at one point or another helped most of the Speed contingent through a bleak lunchtime when another Pret sandwich simply won’t cut it.

In fact, I love it so much that I went online and joined its email newsletter database – and perhaps more to the point, I’ve actually stuck with it. Its humorous tone and snappy content means it’s a welcome arrival in my inbox and more to the point, its quite good at giving away free stuff. Not that I’m cheap or anything.

It seems that others share my love of Tossed as it has been nominated as a finalist in the food and drink category of Metro’s Venture Candy Awards. To help the company clinch the title, they have emailed their database offering a free coffee for anyone who can prove they’ve voted for them.

I’m slightly dubious about the morality behind essentially bribing your way to first place but I guess if Gordon Brown et al have taught us anything, it’s that sometimes you’ve got to whatever it takes to win.

Now, where’s my free coffee…

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April 15th, 2010 by Chris McCrudden

Why I won't be watching the Leaders' Debate tonight

Hat-tip for Gawker (or as I call it, the grad-school student’s Perez Hilton) here.

As someone who cares a lot about politics, but not much for our present crop of politicians, I’ve had very mixed feelings about the phoney war that is the UK‘s general election campaign. I suspect this has a lot to do with over-anticipation. After all, we’ve been waiting for this since Gordon ‘Dracula’ Brown turned himself into a cloud of black smoke and snuck through 10 Downing Street‘s keyhole in summer 2007. And like all things we’ve waited a bit or too long for – like the second Stone Roses album, or losing one’s virginity – the reality is always disappointing compared to the anticipation.

Nor can I get very excited about the prospect of head-to-head leadership debates starting tonight on the BBC. This is despite major broadcasters telling us at every opportunity that this is the biggest news story since the dinosaurs went for a lie down 65 million years ago because they were “feeling a bit poorly”. We’re meant to think they’re a victory for democracy as they happen in America. And yes, American democracy may have brought us Nixon vs. Kennedy, but it also brought us Florida 2000 and Sarah Palin.

But I wasn’t exactly able to explain why the thought of Brown, Cameron and Clegg debating their micro-policies tonight failed to light my democractic fire. Until I read this on Gawker this morning. Because there’s nothing like a disinterested outsider’s point of view for putting into words what you felt, but couldn’t articulate.

On the non-choice facing the British public it said: ‘if you were faced with a choice between three parties, headed by magnificently uncharismatic men, whose policies range from “tax the rich slightly more” to “don’t tax the rich at all,” wouldn’t you want to focus on things like, did Gordon Brown yell… at a secretary? Democracy in action!’

Thank you Gawker. I just wish your wisdom made me feel one iota better.

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March 23rd, 2010 by Steve

Daily News 23/03

ITPRO – Browser ballot hits Internet Explorer’s market share

The browser ballot has hit the market share of Microsoft’s Internet Explorer in France, Britain and Italy.

The Daily Telegraph – China angry as Google stops censoring search results

Google has stopped censoring its search results in China in defiance of the country’s authorities, sparking a furious response from Beijing. The internet giant said yesterday it was closing its China-based search engine and redirecting visitors to an uncensored site based in Hong Kong.

The Daily Telegraph – Google offers racist search suggestion after hack

Google offered “Why are black people so ugly?” as a search suggestion after hackers avoided the firm’s filtering process. The question appeared when internet users typed in the word “why” and Google offered the question in full as one of its suggestions for what you may be about to write. The firm has extensive filters which are intended to remove offensive suggestions but hackers appear to have got around the controls and users picked up on it.

Computing.co.uk – Brown sees government savings of £11bn from new IT

In a major speech made today, Gordon Brown outlined plans for a new digital Britain that will save the government millions of pounds and be underpinned by UK-wide access to super-fast broadband and the ‘next generation web’.

BBC – Mixed reaction to fast net pledge

Labour plans to wire up UK homes with super-fast broadband have met with a mixed response. Experts want more details about what “super-fast broadband” means and how the plan would be implemented.

The Register – OFT to examine BBC’s Canvas

The Office Fair of Trading is to examine Project Canvas, the BBC’s strategic Sky-f*cker next generation set-top box. The BBC Trust looked at Canvas and decided that its strategic goals of screwing over Murdoch and Branson furthering BBC content were not incompatible with the Trust’s charter.

The Register – Home Office takes non-action against phone pinchers

The Home Office is demanding that mobile phone recyclers continue what they’re already doing, in the name of cracking down on mobile phone theft. The office is busy creating a new Code of Practice which will require the industry to check handsets sent for recycling against the register of stolen phones, preventing thieves cashing in on the £25 average value of a handset. Which would be most laudable, it if wasn’t happening already.

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September 16th, 2009 by Speed Budapest (Matt)

Daily News 16/09

IT PRO – Businesses shy away from prosecuting cyber criminals
Businesses often shy away from sharing information about cyber crime with the police because they do not want to end up dealing with a public court case, according to an expert. John Harrison, an independent consultant with three decades experience working for BT, said that companies often don’t want to prosecute when they become a victim of cyber crime.

ITVT – YouTube Trumpets “Sophisticated” Usage of its Interactive Video Annotations Service
In a posting on its corporate blog, Monday, YouTube noted that its Interactive Video Annotations service–a set of tools that allow users to add text and hyperlinks directly onto their videos–is now one year old. According to the company, the service has since its summer, 2008 launch been “put to use with increasing sophistication” in order to, among other things: Provide dynamic commentary, Add interactive links and menus, Create branching storylines, Create interactive games and entertainments.

Computing – Berners-Lee briefs Brown on opening up government data
Sir Tim Berners-Lee has visited 10 Downing Street to update Gordon Brown and the Cabinet on the progress of his task to make government data more open and accessible. The inventor of the web and his colleague Professor Nigel Shadbolt, from the University of Southampton, were asked in June to help open up public data. According to Number 10, Berners-Lee told the Cabinet about the goal of delivering a single online access point to government information, similar to the one introduced by President Obama’s administration in the US.

Computer World UK – Security execs are insecure about Twitter
According to this report from Computer World security event in San Diego, security execs hate Twitter

FT.com – Apple TV rivals offer far more features
While Apple figures out what to do with its languishing Apple TV – it quietly dropped its 40Gb model on Monday leaving only the 160Gb version – there are plenty of other contenders scrapping to bring networked content to the big living-room screen. Among them – FreeAgent Theater+, announced by Seagate today as an improved version of the unit it launched only six months ago.

The Telegraph – Guardian staff told to expect redundancies
In a letter to staff, Guardian News & Media managing director Tim Brooks warned that planned steps to stem losses meant redundancies were “likely”. He wrote: “We are looking at everything – literally everything – that we do, to see how we can economise, and we will do whatever we can to keep the impact on staff to a minimum. However, because the biggest portion of our costs is people’s salaries, we have to review staffing levels.”

BBC News – Facebook grows and makes money
Facebook has begun making money, ahead of schedule. The world’s largest social networking site is now ‘cash flow positive’, something it hadn’t expected to achieve until 2010. Founder Mark Zuckerberg said: “This is important to us because it sets Facebook up to be a strong independent service for the long term. We are succeeding at building Facebook in a sustainable way. We are just getting started on our goal of connecting everyone.” Facebook also announced it now has 300m active users worldwide, up from 250m in July, and is currently gaining users at a rate of 5m a week.

BBC News – French ‘pass’ piracy legislation
The French National Assembly has passed a draft law that would allow illegal downloaders to be thrown off the net. The French hard-line policy on piracy has drawn worldwide attention as nations around the globe grapple with the issue of piracy.

BBC News – New Africa broadband ‘ready’
A new high-speed undersea cable connecting East Africa with the rest of the world is poised to go live, Kenya’s top internet official has told the BBC.

Paid Content – Lovefilm Looks To BBC Canvas; C4, UK Film Council In Talks
Project Canvas director Richard Halton told the Westminster Media Forum that he expects the BBC, ITV, Five and BT-backed IPTV venture to ultimately offer a mix of free and paid-for content. He said: “Canvas offers scope for lots of different models, but Canvas doesn’t have some puritanical view that if you don’t offer some free content you’re not allowed in. It’s an open platform.”

Computer Weekly – Businesses find new uses for mainframes
Businesses are finding more ways to use their IBM System z mainframe platforms, a study from IDC has found. Far from being killed off, the mainframe is still considered a significant platform for running applications, according to the analyst firm.

Computer Weekly – Crowdsourcing reveals 600 search engine flaws
A competition for software testers to reveal bugs in major search engines has unearthed over 600 in Google, Google Caffeine, Bing and Yahoo.

The Register – Rights commission slams police DNA database advice
The Equality and Human Rights Commission has criticised the Association of Chief Police Officers’ advice to chief constables to continue adding profiles of innocent people to the DNA database. The advice recommends continuing to apply existing retention policy until the Home Office issues new guidance in 2010. According to the commission, this does not meet a European Court of Human Rights requirement for there to be clear reasons for holding DNA data on someone who has not been convicted of a crime.

Silicon.com – Intuit snaps up start-up Mint.com in $170m deal
Financial software maker Intuit is to acquire Mint.com for $170m. Intuit said the acquisition of Mint.com, a start-up launched two years ago that tracks personal finance data, will help it gain more clout in the software-as-a-service sphere.

June 12th, 2009 by Chris Measures

Opening up government data – more difficult than creating the World Wide Web?

As part of Gordon Brown’s latest reshuffle, Sir Tim Berners-Lee, the architect of the World Wide Web has been appointed to open up access to government data.

On paper an extremely positive move. It is taxpayer’s data after all and citizen involvement via the web is increasing. Providing real, accurate government data will deliver the transparency that people need to understand what is happening on key issues.

There are big differences between this project and the creation of the World Wide Web. The web provided a platform for people who want (and in some cases are desperate) to share information. Can anyone (let alone someone based in the US) persuade notoriously secretive local and central government mandarins to give up information – particularly when it might show they are not doing a good job?

This is a major cultural change – if Sir Tim can crack this it will arguably be a bigger achievement than inventing the hyperlink…….

March 26th, 2009 by Chris Measures

Want technology strength? Better go to Iceland

If Gordon Brown is relying on the UK’s technology skills to get us out of recession, he’s out of luck. The latest World Economic Forum report on networked economies puts the UK 15th, a drop of three places from last year. And well below Iceland and the rest of the Nordic economies who dominate the top 10.

While plans are afoot to get primary school children blogging and tweeting are a step in the right direction it is really time to invest in training existing staff and ensuring they have the resources if we are to come out of the recession in a competitive position

March 26th, 2009 by Nick Bishop

Tory MEP embarrasses political reporters

Those diehards who believe in the undisputed primacy of our national media should listen to the story of Daniel Hannan, a backbench MEP.

Hannan made a short speech aimed directly at Gordon Brown in the European Parliament on Tuesday this week. His efforts to persuade political reporters to cover his speech were, not unsurprisingly, ignored. A speech by an unknown MEP ain’t news.

But its become so. Hannan posted his speech on YouTube and bloggers from around the world link to it. Mainstream political commentators including Rush Limbaugh have followed. Even leftwingers will admit it’s a mightily impressive speech. In two days, the YouTube clip has had over 800,000 views.

But what does this tell us? That old media no longer has a monopoly on deciding what’s news and what’s not. Will be interesting to see whether events like this encourage newspapers and broadcasters to revise their view of what warrants a place on the editorial agenda.